Saturday, August 7

John Randle

John Anthony Randle,
(born December 12, 1967 in Mumford, Texas) played defensive tackle for the Minnesota Vikings and the Seattle Seahawks of the NFL. On February 6, 2010 he was voted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Born in Mumford, Texas, Randle was raised poor, and worked odd jobs when he was young. His brother Ervin Randle played as a linebacker for eight years.




Randle played high school football in Hearne, Texas. He started his college playing career at Trinity Valley Community College in Athens, Texas, before transferring to Texas A&I University–Kingsville. He currently lives in Medina, Minnesota with his wife and children.
Randle went undrafted; he tried out for his brother's team, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, but was thought to be too small, and was not signed to a contract. The 6'1" 287-Lbs defensive linemen was picked up by the Vikings during training camp, playing his first season in 1990. He went to his first Pro Bowl in 1993 after recording 11.5 sacks, and was quickly becoming one of the dominant defensive tackles of his era. Once Henry Thomas left the Vikings, Randle increased his training regimen, and became well known for his disarming on-field heckling of opposing players. Randle would record double digit sacks during eight different seasons, including a career-high and league-leading 15.5 sacks in 1997. He had an ongoing rivalry with Packers quarterback Brett Favre, whom he sacked more than any other quarterback; Favre said that Randle was the toughest defensive player he faced and "on artificial turf he's unblockable". To play off the rivalry with Brett Favre, Randle starred in a commercial which featured himself sewing a miniature version of Favre's #4 jersey which he put on a live chicken. The commercial then showed Randle chasing the chicken around what was supposed to be Randle's backyard and ended with Randle cooking chicken on his BBQ, leading to fierce protests from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. Like fellow Minnesota Viking Chris Hovan, Randle was known for eccentric face painting as well as trash talking on the field.
At the end of the 2000 season, Randle signed with the Seattle Seahawks, and retired in March 2004. He had planned to retire a year earlier, but Seahawks coach Mike Holmgren convinced him to stay one more year.
Randle left the NFL tied with Richard Dent for 5th in number of career sacks, and his 137.5 career sacks is the most by a defensive tackle in NFL history. Over his career he was named to seven Pro Bowl squads. He was named All Tackle Machine of 1999 by Tackle The Magazine.
Randle was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame and inducted into the Minnesota Vikings Ring of Honor in 2008. He was eligible for the Pro Football Hall of Fame starting in 2009, and was elected in his second year of eligibility in 2010.


(source:wikipedia)

Russ Grimm

Russell Scott Grimm,
(born May 2, 1959 in Scottdale, Pennsylvania) is a former American football guard for the Washington Redskins of the National Football League. As a collegian, he was an All-American center at the University of Pittsburgh. As a professional, Grimm had multi-selections to both the All-Pro and Pro Bowl teams, and will be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2010. Grimm played 11 seasons for the Redskins and was a first team selection to the NFL 1980s All-Decade Team. He is currently the assistant head coach and offensive line coach for the Arizona Cardinals.
Grimm is featured in the video game All-Pro Football 2K8. 

NFL Playing Career

He was drafted in the third round by the Redskins in the 1981 NFL Draft. Upon hearing that he had been drafted by the Redskins, Grimm thought to himself, "I'm going to Seattle." Along with Jeff Bostic, Mark May, George Starke and Joe Jacoby, Russ Grimm was a founding member of the Redskins' renowned "Hogs" offensive line of the 1980s and early 1990s (deemed one of the best front fives of NFL history), which was a mainstay of the Redskins' glory years during the first Joe Gibbs era.
During his 11 seasons as the Redskins' starting guard, Russ Grimm helped lead his team to 4 Super Bowl appearances and 3 Super Bowl victories (Super Bowl XVII in 1983, Super Bowl XXII in 1988, and Super Bowl XXVI in 1992). Along the way, Grimm was selected to 4 consecutive Pro Bowl appearances (1983 through 1986). He was named an All-Pro in each of those years as well.
According to Mark May, a teammate both at Pittsburgh and on the Redskins, no one lived up to the "Hog" persona more than Grimm: "He was a blue collar stiff and proud of it." In his 2005 memoir, May recalled a Christmas party at his house in 1982: "I iced down a keg of beer and stationed it on the landing between the first floor and basement. Russ turned the landing into his headquarters for the evening. He grabbed a chair and a Hog shot glass (a 60-ounce pitcher) and parked his butt on the landing next to the keg. Except for an occasional trip to the bathroom, we didn't see Russ on the first level all night..."
Grimm was a semifinalist for the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2004, and a finalist in 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2008. He was elected to the Hall of Fame in 2010
[edit]NFL Coaching Career

After hanging up his player's cleats, Grimm returned to the Redskins as a tight end coach (from 1992 through 1996, and offensive line coach from 1997 through 2000, during which he was instrumental in the development of tackles Chris Samuels and Jon Jansen. After his coaching stint with the Redskins, Grimm joined the Pittsburgh Steelers as offensive line coach in September 2000. In 2004 he was promoted to Assistant Head Coach/Offensive Line.
In 2004, after the Chicago Bears fired Dick Jauron, Bears management considered Grimm as a top candidate for the job. The job eventually went to then St. Louis Rams defensive coordinator Lovie Smith.
In 2005, Grimm added another Super Bowl ring (totalling 4) to his résumé as part of the Pittsburgh Steelers' coaching staff (Offensive Line Coach).Under Grimm guidance in 2005, the Super Bowl champion Steelers averaged nearly 140 yards rushing per game during the regular season to rank fifth in the NFL while also grinding out 181 rushing yards in their Super Bowl XL victory over the Seattle Seahawks. In 2006 Steelers offensive line helped pave the way for running back Willie Parker to gain 1,494 yards and 13 touchdowns on 337 carries with 4.4 yard avg. and earn his first Pro Bowl selection. Pittsburgh offense finished the 2006 season with the 10th best rushing attack in the NFL, helping to give the Steelers the 7th ranked total offense in the league. Parker finished the season with the second and third top rushing performances of the year in the NFL with 223 rushing yards 32 att., TD against Cleveland Browns and 213 yards with 22 att, 2 TD vs. New Orleans Saints.
On January 5 , 2007, Bill Cowher resigned as head coach of the Steelers. In the press conference that followed, Steeler's President Art Rooney II announced Russ Grimm as one of the candidates for the job. On January 15, 2007, he was named as a finalist for the job along with Ken Whisenhunt and Mike Tomlin. The Steelers would end up hiring Tomlin as their head coach. Shortly thereafter, Grimm was hired by the Arizona Cardinals to serve as their assistant head coach/offensive line coach. In Arizona, he serves under head coach Ken Whisenhunt who Grimm worked with under Bill Cowher in Pittsburgh. In his first season in Arizona, his offensive line allowed only 24 sacks, 6th best in the NFL and the fewest given up by the Cardinals since 1978 with 22. Grimm’s offensive line also paved the way for running back Edgerrin James to rush for 1,222 yards, the fifth best total in team history. The Cardinals offense finished with the 5th best passing attack in the NFL and threw for a team record 32 touchdowns.
[edit]Steelers coach candidacy
After the Arizona Cardinals hired Whisenhunt as their new head coach, on January 14, 2007, the finalists for the Steelers position were reduced to Grimm and Mike Tomlin. On January 22, 2007, Mike Prisuta of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reported from an undisclosed source within the Pittsburgh Steelers organization that, then-assistant coach, Grimm would replace Bill Cowher as the team's coach. A day earlier, ESPN and Sports Illustrated stated on their web sites that Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator Mike Tomlin had been chosen to replace Cowher. However an NFL source confirmed on January 21, 2007 that Tomlin had not heard from the Steelers and no contract negotiations had taken place. Grimm was one of three finalists to replace Cowher, along with Tomlin and Chicago Bears defensive coordinator Ron Rivera.
24 hours later Tomlin was announced as the Steelers new coach. Steelers' President Art Rooney II told CBS Sports on January 23, 2007 that no formal offer was ever made to Grimm, explaining that team reps did talk about an offer and contract numbers with both Grimm and Tomlin on January 20th. Rooney explained, "We did tell Russ nothing would be final until Sunday". I feel bad if he got the wrong impression." As a result Prisuta's story was discredited and he later resigned in 2009 from the Tribune-Review to accept a position with Pittsburgh's WDVE Radio.
Personal

As a prep, Grimm punted, played quarterback and linebacker at Southmoreland High School while earning nine varsity letters and starring on the basketball team. Grimm was inducted into the Western Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame. His younger brother, Donn , was a starting linebacker on Notre Dame 1988 national championship team and signed with the Cardinals as a rookie free agent in 1991. He has four children, Chad, Cody, and fraternal twins Devin and Dylan. All of his children attended Oakton High School in Fairfax County, Virginia. Chad played football at Virginia Tech and is currently an offensive quality control coach for the Cardinals, and Dylan plays lacrosse at Loyola University Maryland. His second eldest son, Cody, also played at Virginia Tech and was drafted by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the seventh round of the 2010 NFL Draft.



(source:Wikipedia)

Floyd Little

Floyd Douglas Little,
(born July 4, 1942 in New Haven, Connecticut) is a Pro Football Hall of Fame running back, and was a three-time American football All-American running back at Syracuse University, following in the footsteps of many great running backs at Syracuse such as Jim Brown and Ernie Davis. In 1967 Floyd Little was the 6th selection of the first common AFL-NFL draft. He was the first ever first-round draft pick to sign with the American Football League's Denver Broncos where he was known simply as "The Franchise" for saving the team from certain relocation by forcing the expansion of Mile High Stadium and generating a string of sellouts that lasts today.
Little led Professional Football in rushing for the six-year period from 1968 to 1973. He retired as the 7th leading rusher in Professional Football history with 6,323 yards rushing and 54 touchdowns.
Legend has it that he was "fired" by coach Lou Saban after a fumble that led to a late-game lead for the Buffalo Bills in 1968. Little, after refusing to leave the huddle, asked QB Marlin Briscoe to "throw the ball as far as you can and I'll catch it." Briscoe threw it, Little caught it, and the Broncos kicked a winning field goal.
Little became a charter member of the Broncos' Ring of Fame in 1984; he was the first Bronco to win the rushing title in the new AFC in 1970, with 901 yards; the following year he became the first Bronco to eclipse 1,000 yards, gaining 1,133, to lead the entire NFL. He was an American Football League All-Star in 1968, named first-team "All-AFL" in 1969, and made the AFC-NFC Pro Bowl in 1970, 1971 and 1973. At just 5'10" and 195 pounds, Little was a pioneer who became the smallest back to lead the league in rushing since before World War II. He was as versatile as he was exciting. He led the league in combined yards in 1967 & 68 and was the only player to return punts for TDs in both seasons. During his prime, 1968–73, he led the NFL in both yards Rushing and Yards from Scrimmage (rushing and receiving). Little was voted "Running Back of the year" in 1972 by the Professional Football Writers of America, and was 1 of just 7 players to total more than 100 yards (104) per game. Incredibly, despite spending most of his career as the lone offensive threat on a losing team, he was one of the most explosive offensive threats of his time.
Despite retiring as the 7th leading rusher in Pro Football history, Little had not yet been admitted to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, while the first six were in the Hall of Fame. This was typical of players who played or started their careers in the old American Football League, which to this day is still some what under-represented in the Hall of Fame. In the summer of 2009, Little was nominated and became a finalist for induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. He was finally rewarded for his career in Professional Football and was voted in on February 6, 2010, his induction took place in Canton, OH on August 7, 2010. Little was the first Bronco to have his jersey number "44" officially retired.
Little also coached at the University of California, Santa Barbara, when the university briefly reinstated NCAA football in the mid-eighties.
He briefly served as a Football analyst for NBC in the late 1970s, and was featured as a contestant on the Richard Karn era of Family Feud in the mid-2000's.
Little is a member of The Pigskin Club Of Washington, D.C. National Intercollegiate All-American Football Players Honor Roll. In 1983 he was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.
Little formerly owned automobile dealerships in Denver, the Seattle area and Santa Barbara, though he is said to now be retired.
He was portrayed in the 2008 Ernie Davis biopic The Express by Chadwick Boseman.
Inducted to the Pro Football Hall of Fame alongside Floyd on August 7, 2010 are Jerry Rice, Emmitt Smith, Russ Grimm, Rickey Jackson, John Randle, and Dick LeBeau.


Statistics

YearTeamGamesRushingReceiving
AttemptsYardsY/ATDsRecYardsY/RTDs
1967Denver Broncos131303812.917111.60
1968Denver Broncos111585843.731933117.41
1969Denver Broncos91467295.061921811.51
1970Denver Broncos142099014.33171619.50
1971Denver Broncos1328411334.06262559.80
1972Denver Broncos142168594.092836713.14
1973Denver Broncos142569793.8124142310.31
1974Denver Broncos141173122.712934411.90
1975Denver Broncos141254453.622930810.62
CareerDenver Broncos117164163233.943215241811.29



(source:wikipedia)

Mechele Linehan

Mechele Kaye Hughes,
(b. 12 October 1972 in New Orleans, Louisiana) was, for a time, an American convicted murderer. She is currently free after successfully appealing her conviction. She was serving a 99 year prison sentence for her role in the death of her former fiancé, Kent Leppink.
Early life and childhood

Her father, with the United States Air Force, moved the family often throughout her childhood. After her second divorce, her mother resettled the family near New Orleans, where she had relatives.
Linehan left home at age 16 and moved to New York City, where she hoped to work as a model. Instead, she worked at a Delicatessen in New Jersey that was owned by a man she was dating.
Kent Leppink's Murder

Kent Leppink was a Michigan native who moved to Alaska to work as a fisherman. He met Linehan at a Striptease club called The Great Alaska Bush Company. On 2 May 1996, he was found dead in Hope, Alaska with three .44 caliber bullet wounds. Just days before his death, Leppink had removed Linehan from his $1 million life insurance policy, and sent a letter to his parents stating that, should he meet with foul play, Linehan, John Carlin, or Scott Hilke probably had something to do with it.
Later life

Linehan married medical student Colin Linehan in 1998, and settled in Olympia, Washington. She earned a Master of Public Administration from the Evergreen State College, and operated a laser clinic where Colin worked.
Trial and Appeal

The prosecution alleged that Linehan followed the plot of The Last Seduction because she was "obsessed with the film." (Please Note: This specific point was one of the reasons for Ms Linehan's successful appeal) A former co-worker testified that Mechele told her that Linda Fiorentino's "character was her heroine and that she wanted to be just like her." The source for this testimony was the coworkers diary. After reviewing the diary there was an entry by the coworker stating she watched the movie with her boyfriend and not Mechele.[4] An insurance agent testified that Linehan tried to cancel the policy days before Leppink's death, then allegedly arranged for Carlin to murder him to collect on the policy. Carlin's son testified that his father had lied about not owning a .44 caliber Desert Eagle. Another witness also said that he sold a Desert Eagle in 1995, and left it at Carlin's house.
The defense argued that Leppink was an obsessive client who fabricated a romantic relationship with Linehan. Her friends and family stated that, given her history of volunteerism, such an act did not match her personality.[5] An ex-boyfriend of Linehan's, who painted a picture of Linehan as a gold-digger, was shown by the defense to be contradicting previous testimony made in 2006.
Linehan's sister, Melissa Hughes, reportedly living in the Czech Republic at the time of the trial, was arrested as a material witness upon returning to the US. She spent one week in an Atlanta jail for her refusal to testify against her sister.
Carlin was convicted of murder in April 2007. On 22 October 2007, Linehan was convicted of murder and conspiracy to commit murder. On 2 April 2008, she was sentenced to 99 years, and transferred to Hiland Mountain Correctional Center in Eagle River, Alaska.
On the 8 March 2008 installment of 48 Hour Mystery, Linehan told Susan Spencer: "I just feel like there is nothing I can do to make people believe me or make people like me.... Anybody else that knew me or worked with me didn't feel that way. You tell me how a 22-, 21-year-old girl can make grown men do these things." Carlin was found bludgeoned to death in his cell at the Spring Creek Correctional Center in Seward, Alaska on 27 October 2008.
In October, 2007, Mechele Linehan was convicted of the 1996 murder of Kent Leppink, a notorious case in Anchorage, Alaska that reached national attention on March 8, 2008, through a special episode of the CBS documentary show, 48 Hours Mystery. On April 2, Linehan was given a maximum sentence of 99 years in prison. Backstory Linehan met Leppnik when she was working as a nude dancer at an establishment called the Great Alaskan Bush Company. She claimed that while she received gifts and money from Leppnik, she was never in a relationship with him, and insists he was an obsessive client who imagined a relationship. However, evidence presented during the trial included a letter from Linehan to Leppnik in which she suggested marriage.
Prosecutors convinced jurors that Linehan had convinced her ex-boyfriend John Carlin, with whom she was living at the time, to kill Leppink in order to receive the benefits from a million-dollar insurance policy, for which Linehan mistakenly believed herself to be the beneficiary.
During the sentencing, a forensic psychologist testified that Linehan could not have committed the murder, and friends of Linehan's said that given her longtime vegetarianism and history of community involvement, they couldn't imagine that she would have committed such a crime.
The convictions had, however, been largely based on the testimony of Carlin's son, who said that he saw Linehan and Carlin washing a gun in the sink after the murder.
Linehan was represented on appeal by two Alaska lawyers, Jeff Feldman and Susan Orlansky. After the submission of briefs, the case was argued to the Alaska Court of Appeal in December, 2009. Less than 60 days later, on February 5, 2010, the Alaska Court of Appeals overturned Linehan's conviction. The reversal of the conviction concluded it was improper for Superior Court Judge Philip Volland to allow two pieces of evidence into the trial: testimony about the movie, "The Last Seduction," and a letter written by victim Kent Leppink in the days before he died. The letter, which Leppink wrote to his parents, said Linehan was the likely culprit if he ended up dead. Until May 11, 2010, Linehan was incarcerated at Hiland Mountain Correctional Center in Eagle River, AK. On April 28, 2010 a judge set her bond at $25,000.00.
On May 11, 2010, an east coast Corporate Executive and predictive modeler, Brian C. Watt, from Chester Springs, Pa, donated the money necessary to release Linehan from prison, paying a $25,000 one time bail bondsman fee.
Mechele Linehan was taken to an undisclosed location in Anchorage AK. Until early July 2010, Linehan was monitored 24 hours a day, by a series of third party court-approved custodian as a condition of bail. Since that time, the court has approved electronic monitoring of the accused, and removed the 3rd party custodian requirement, as a conditionality of bail.
Media reporting

On July 27, 2008, Linehan's case was profiled on Dateline NBC. An update aired on May 22, 2009.
On January 29, 2009, Mechele Linehan's case was profiled on the Oxygen Network series Snapped.
On June 6, 2009, Linehan's case was profiled as part of the E! network program "Fatal Beauty: 15 Most Notorious Women." The program re-aired on February 12, 2010, just one week after Linehan's conviction was overturned, without any change to the program.
HarperCollins has released a book on June 30, 2009 entitled "Deadly Angel: The Bizarre True Story of Alaska's Killer Stripper."



(source:wikipedia)

Full employment

full employment,

macroeconomics, full employment is a condition of the national economy, where all or nearly all persons willing and able to work at the prevailing wages and working conditions are able to do so. It is defined either as 0% unemployment, literally, no unemployment (the rate of unemployment is the fraction of the work force unable to find work), as byJames Tobin,or as the level of employment rates when there is nocyclical unemployment.It is defined by the majority of mainstreameconomists as being an acceptable level of natural unemployment above 0%, the discrepancy from 0% being due to non-cyclical types of unemployment. Unemployment above 0% is advocated as necessary to control inflation, which has brought about the concept of the Non-Accelerating Inflation Rate of Unemployment (NAIRU); the majority of mainstream economists mean NAIRU when speaking of "full" employment.

Economic concept

What most neoclassical economists mean by "full" employment is a rate somewhat less than 100% employment, considering slightly lower levels desirable, others, such as James Tobin, vehemently disagree, considering full employment as 0% unemployment:
“As a young professor I did a paper where I analyzed the optimal unemployment rate,” said Joseph Stiglitz, a professor at Columbia University in New York, who knew Tobin at Yale. “Tobin went livid over the idea. To him the optimal unemployment rate was zero.”
Rates of unemployment substantially above 0% have also been attacked by John Maynard Keynes:
"The Conservative belief that there is some law of nature which prevents men from being employed, that it is 'rash' to employ men, and that it is financially 'sound' to maintain a tenth of the population in idleness for an indefinite period, is crazily improbable – the sort of thing which no man could believe who had not had his head fuddled with nonsense for years and years. The objections which are raised are mostly not the objections of experience or of practical men. They are based on highly abstract theories – venerable, academic inventions, half misunderstood by those who are applying them today, and based on assumptions which are contrary to the facts…Our main task, therefore, will be to confirm the reader’s instinct that what seems sensible is sensible, and what seems nonsense is nonsense."
– J.M. Keynes in a pamphlet to support Lloyd George in the 1929 election.
20th century British economist William Beveridge stated that an unemployment rate of 3% was full employment. Other economists have provided estimates between 2% and 13%, depending on the country, time period, and the various economists' political biases.
Before Friedman and Phelps, Abba Lerner (Lerner 1951, Chapter 15) developed a version of the NAIRU. Unlike the current view, he saw a range of "full employment" unemployment rates. He distinguished between "high" full employment (the lowest sustainable unemployment under incomes policies) and "low" full employment (the lowest sustainable unemployment rate without these policies).
Technical terms

"Ideal" unemployment
An alternative, more normative, definition (used by some labor economists) would see "full employment" as the attainment of the ideal unemployment rate, where the types of unemployment that reflect labor-market inefficiency (such as structural unemployment) do not exist. Only some frictional unemployment would exist, where workers are temporarily searching for new jobs. For example, Lord William Beveridge defined "full employment" as where the number of unemployed workers equaled the number of job vacancies available. He preferred that the economy be kept above that full employment level in order to allow maximum economic production.
Long run aggregate supply
The concept of full employment has so far been used in conjunction with the long run aggregate supply (LRAS) curve, where long run potential output is also the full employment level of output. Full employment does not mean that there is 'zero unemployment', but rather that all of the people willing and able to work have jobs at the current wage rate. Full employment is the quantity of labour employed when the labour market is in equilibrium.
NAIRU

The following should be understood in discussions of NAIRU: Governments that follow it are attempting to keep unemployment at certain levels (usually over four percent, and as high as ten or more percent) by keeping interest rates high. As interest rates increase, more bankruptcies of individuals and businesses occur, meaning less money to hire staff or purchase goods (the making and distributing of which requires workers, which means jobs). It might also be noted that the main cause of inflation is not high employment, but rather the ability of banks to make money with little to no backing with things of value (commodities such as gold and silver are some examples), thus flooding the market with money and decreasing the value of each dollar already issued in the process, assuming the economy has not kept up to this increase in issued loans. Economists such as Milton Friedman and Dr. Ravi Batra have theorized ways that a modern economy could have low inflation and near full employment (as in close to 100% of those who are not students and are healthy enough to work, and who wish to work at any given point in time), as of yet these have yet to be widely disseminated through the press or introduced by most governments. Paul Martin - former finance minister and past Prime Minister of Canada - once held that full employment could be achieved, yet let go of this idea after gaining power. For more on this see the expose "Shooting the Hippo" by Linda McQuaig, author and former columnist for many of Canada's top newspapers.
Friedman's view has prevailed so that in much of modern macroeconomics, full employment means the lowest level of unemployment that can be sustained given the structure of the economy. Using the terminology first introduced by James Tobin (following the lead of Franco Modigliani), this equals the Non-Accelerating Inflation Rate of Unemployment (NAIRU) when the real gross domestic product equals potential output. This concept is identical to the "natural" rate but reflects the fact that there is nothing "natural" about an economy.
At this level of unemployment, there is no unemployment above the level of the NAIRU. That is, at full employment there is no cyclical or deficient-demand unemployment. If the unemployment rate stays below this "natural" or "inflation threshold" level for several years, it is posited that inflation will accelerate, i.e. get worse and worse (in the absence of wage and price controls). Similarly, inflation will get better (decelerate) if unemployment rates exceed the NAIRU for a long time. The theory says that inflation does not rise or fall when the unemployment equals the "natural" rate. This is where the term NAIRU is derived.
The level of the NAIRU thus depends on the degree of "supply side" unemployment, i.e., joblessness that can't be abolished by high demand. This includes frictional, structural, and classical unemployment.
Phillips curve
Ideas associated with the Phillips curve questioned the possibility and value of full employment in a society: this theory suggests that full employment—especially as defined normatively—will be associated with positive inflation. The Phillips curve tells us also that there is no single unemployment number that one can single out as the "full employment" rate. Instead, there is a trade-off between unemployment and inflation: a government might choose to attain a lower unemployment rate but would pay for it with higher inflation rates. In 1968, Milton Friedman, leader of the monetarist school of economics, and Edmund Phelps posited a unique full employment rate of unemployment, what they called the "natural" rate of unemployment. But this is seen not as a normative choice as much as something we are stuck with, even if it is unknown. Rather than trying to attain full employment, Friedman argues that policy-makers should try to keep prices stable (a low or even a zero inflation rate). If this policy is sustained, he suggests that the economy will gravitate to the "natural" rate of unemployment automatically.
Structural unemployment

Some Economists estimate a "range" of possible unemployment rates. For example, in 1999, in the United States, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) gives an estimate of the "full-employment unemployment rate" of 4 to 6.4%. This is the estimated "structural" unemployment rate, (the unemployment when there is full employment), plus & minus, the standard error of the estimate. (Estimates for other countries are also available from the OECD.) 
Full employability
Full employability indicates an attempt by government to make people "employable" by both positive means (e.g. training courses) and negative means (e.g. cuts in benefits). It does not necessarily create full employment.
Technical issues

Whatever the definition of full employment, it is difficult to discover exactly what unemployment rate it corresponds to. In the United States, for example, the economy saw stable inflation despite low unemployment during the late 1990s, contradicting most economists' estimates of the NAIRU.
The idea that the full-employment unemployment rate (NAIRU) is not a unique number has been seen in recent empirical research. Staiger, Stock, and Watson found that the range of possible values of the NAIRU (from 4.3 to 7.3% unemployment) was too large to be useful to macroeconomic policy-makers. Robert Eisner suggested that for 1956-95 there was a zone from about 5% to about 10% unemployment between the low-unemployment realm of accelerating inflation and the high-unemployment realm of disinflation. In between, he found that inflation falls with falling unemployment.
Worse, the NAIRU doesn't stay the same over time—and can change due to economic policy. For example, some economists argue that British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's anti-inflation policies using persistently high unemployment led to higher structural unemployment and a higher NAIRU.
Policy

The active pursuit of national full employment through interventionist government policies is associated with Keynesian economics and marked the postwar agenda of many Western nations, until the stagflation of the 1970s.
Australia
Australia was the first country in the world in which full employment in a free society was made official policy by its government. On May 30, 1945, The Australian Labor Party Prime Minister John Curtin and his Employment Minister John Dedman proposed a white paper in the Australian House of Representatives titled Full Employment In Australia, the first time any government apart from totalitarian regimes had unequivocally committed itself to providing work for any person who was willing and able to work. Conditions of full employment lasted in Australia from 1941 to 1975. This had been preceded by the Harvester Judgment (1907), establishing the basic wage (a living wage); while this earlier case was overturned, it remained influential.
United States
The United States is, as a statutory matter, committed to full employment (defined as 3% unemployment for persons 20 and older, 4% for person aged 16 and over), the government is empowered to effect this goal, and a job is a right.The relevant legislation is the Employment Act (1946), initially "Full Employment Act", later amended in the Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act (1978). The 1946 act was passed in the aftermath of World War II, when it was fear that demobilization would result in a depression, as it had following World War I in the Depression of 1920–21, while the 1978 act was passed in following the 1973–75 recession and in the midst of continuing high inflation.
The law states that full employment is one of four economic goals, in concert with growth in production, price stability, and balance of trade and budget, and that the US shall rely primarily on private enterprise to achieve these goals. Specifically, the act is committed to an unemployment rate of no more than 3% for persons aged 20 or over and not more than 4% for persons aged 16 or over (from 1983 onwards), and the Act expressly allows (but does not require) the government to create a "reservoir of public employment" to effect this level of employment. These jobs are required to be in the lower ranges of skill and pay so as to not draw the workforce away from the private sector.
However, since the passage of this act in 1978, the US has, as of 2010 never achieved this level of employment, nor has such a reservoir of public employment been created.
Job guarantee

Some, particularly Post-Keynesian economists have suggested ensuring full employment via a job guarantee program, where those who are unable to find work in the private sector are employed by the government, the stock of thus employed public sector workers fulfilling the same function as the unemployed do in controlling inflation, without the human costs of unemployment.
Tags
Career
Corporatism
Deflation
Employment
False Consciousness
Job guarantee
Labour (economics)
Marxism
Profession
Reserve army of labour
Say's law
Wage slavery



(source:wikipedia)